Premium
Modeling CO 2 injection at Cranfield, Mississippi: Investigation of methane and temperature effects
Author(s) -
Doughty Christine,
Freifeld Barry M.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
greenhouse gases: science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.45
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 2152-3878
DOI - 10.1002/ghg.1363
Subject(s) - methane , plume , mole fraction , aquifer , phase (matter) , carbon dioxide , injection well , flow (mathematics) , chemistry , mechanics , thermodynamics , environmental science , materials science , geology , petroleum engineering , groundwater , physics , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry
A large‐scale carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) injection pilot is ongoing at Cranfield, Mississippi, in a saline aquifer with high dissolved methane (CH 4 ) content, employing one injection well and two observation wells. The breakthrough of CH 4 and CO 2 at the observation wells provides insights to phase partitioning and the multipath nature of flow through the formation. Injected CO 2 is cooler than the formation temperature, making temperature another useful observation. Simulations of the first year of CO 2 injection were conducted with the numerical simulator TOUGH2 and the equation of state module EOS7C, which includes CO 2 , CH 4 , and H 2 O, using an axisymmetric model with layering based on well logs from the injection well. Although the simplification of an axisymmetric model precludes study of formation dip or lateral heterogeneity, its simple structure enables a focus on physical processes involving the phase partitioning of CH 4 and CO 2 , and temperature effects. Field observations that the model reproduces include the arrival of a bank of free‐phase CH 4 ahead of the main CO 2 plume at each observation well, and non‐monotonic changes in CH 4 and CO 2 mole fraction as a function of time, suggesting that multiple distinct flow paths exist between the injection well and the observation wells, each with its own bank of free‐phase CH 4 leading the CO 2 . Model results are compared with temperature observations made in the field with a Distributed Temperature Sensor (DTS) system, suggesting that a well‐defined thermal response reached the near observation well within the seven‐month monitoring period, but not the more distant observation well. © 2013 Society of Chemical Industry and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd